Kansas - Point Of Know Return - Live in Houston 1980 DVD
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- Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024
- www.tommygunvid...
Kansas Live at the Houston Summit December 9, 1980
One of the last performances of the original original Kansas lineup and the only known complete concert with the original lineup on video so this is a very special find for Kansas fans.
01. Opening / Lohengrin
02. Point Of Know Return
03. Icarus - Borne On Wings Of Steel
04. Paradox
05. Hopelessly Human
06. Cheyenne Anthem
07. Dust In The Wind
08. You Think You've Got It Made
09. Mask Of The Great Deceiver
10. Miracles Out Of Nowhere
11. Loner
12. Anything For You
13. Don't Open Your Eyes
14. Got To Rock On
15. No One Together
16. Hold On
17. Relentless
18. Portrait (He Knew)
19. Carry On Wayward Son
You may find songs here from any of the following Kansas albums:
Kansas - 1974
Song For America - 1975
Masque - 1975
Leftoverture - 1976
Point Of Know Return - 1977
Monolith - 1979
Audio-Visions - 1980
What a shame that there are so few quality performances of this band before 1982.
This 1980 concert in Houston looks prehistoric and claustrophobic.
Simply phantastic 😂
MI SONO INNAMORATA DEI KANSAS ❤❤❤
Ah yes, great days of Kanas, except for Steve's Coke fueled manic antics.
Yt sucks
He can't even hit the high note? I think that's like the most powerful bit in the song and apparently live it's more like watching a balloon deflate... and if he can hit it, why choose not to? What crap.
John Rosen
Because that's an easy easy way to lose your voice quicker in life.
If you go watch guys like Freddy Mercury or Steve Perry, they usually refrained from straining their voices live and would sing in a harmony at times. It's just what a smart vocalist does. Go watch Steve Walsh in the early 2000's, he still had an amazing voice!!!
Exactly. And sometimes you're just not in your best voice.
He is singing all the high notes
@@slstlo5316, no, 'they echo the words' is not as high as the studio record.
@showlogicprod Wow, still responding to old comments... huh, forgot this one even existed, I suppose that shows it's importance to me, which is none really. In any case - yep, I am a vocalist in a band, and I have covered this song many times. Is actually one of my favorites tbh. In "Realityland", as you say, straining the voice would mean carrying it far past it's capabilities repeatedly. Many artists hit their highest notes throughout a tour, some do not - it is not impossible that it does not happen, but the way you talk it would seem that you think those that do are stupid ('a smart vocalist...'). You say they work around the possibility of straining their voice 'effortlessly', and yet there are a multitude of ways that segment could have been performed, just as faithfully, and sounded much better. It's like playing an instrument which is out of tune, way out of tune. What I envision, is that it should be good, the reality is that what I envision may be too high on the rung of expectation, because performed live, this song is not good, imo. Thanks for taking the time out of your day to attempt making a point after all these years.